Text of the article:

Ford floats use of notwithstanding clause in Toronto bike lanes case

‘Let’s see what happens at the Court of Appeal,’ Premier Doug Ford told reporters

Aidan Chamandy

Aug 6, 2025 1:41 PM

Premier Doug Ford is gearing up for a fight after a judge pumped the brakes on his government’s plan to remove some Toronto bike lanes.

On Wednesday, Ford left open the possibility of invoking the notwithstanding clause to ensure his government retains the authority to remove bike lanes it disapproves of.

“Let’s see what happens at the Court of Appeal, and then we’ll go from there,” he said at an unrelated announcement in Thornhill.

Ford criticized Justice Paul Schabas’ decision as the “most ridiculous” he’s ever seen.

“You talk about the Charter? It’s trampling on the democratic rights of Ontarians that elected a government, just a few months before … that said they’re going to move, not eliminate … bike lanes from the main arterial roads,” Ford said.

Ford, however, struck a confident tone and said he has confidence the Court of Appeal will rule in his government’s favour.

Using the notwithstanding clause would allow the government to push through the removals, regardless of what the three-judge panel at the Court of Appeals says.

In his July 30 ruling, Justice Schabas wrote “the evidence is clear” that “restoring a lane of motor vehicle traffic … will create greater risk to cyclists and to other users of the road.”

Schabas’ decision didn’t hinge on whether he thought citizens had a right to bike lanes. Instead, it revolved around whether the government’s arguments for removing the lanes — and causing harm to non-driving road users — was based in fact.

The government’s central point was that removing the bike lanes on Yonge Street, University Avenue and Bloor Street would reduce congestion. That, according to Schabas, was predicated on “weak anecdotal evidence and expert opinion,” which was “unsupported, unpersuasive and contrary to the consensus view of experts.”

He wrote that “there is no evidence that the government based its decision on data, manuals or expert ‘highway engineering’, or that its decision would ‘contribute to highway safety.’”

“Rather, the evidence is to the contrary,” he wrote.

Ford is no stranger to using — or threatening to use — the notwithstanding clause, a constitutional provision that was previously taboo in Ontario politics.

He was the first premier in the province’s history to invoke the clause, which has been in place since 1982.

In 2018, he threatened to invoke the clause to reduce the number of Toronto city council members from 47 to 25. Doing so was ultimately unnecessary because the Court of Appeal upheld Queen’s Park’s authority to make the council change.

In 2021, the Superior Court struck down Ford’s attempt to [extend third-party election spending limits](https://www.barrietoday.com/local-news/supreme-court-strikes-down-ford-governments-third-party-political-ads-law-10339531: outbound&utm_medium=referral) to 12 months, up from six months. Ford recalled the legislature and passed the bill with the notwithstanding clause — marking the first time in provincial history the clause was actually used.

Then, in 2022, Ford [used the clause](https://www.ola.org/en/legislative-business/bills/parliament-43/session-1/bill-28: outbound&utm_medium=referral) to ban education workers from striking after contract negotiations broke down. That sparked intense public backlash and Ford repealed the bill days later.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article said Ford in 2022 used the notwithstanding clause to ban teachers from striking. It was in fact used to stop education workers, like librarians, custodians and early childhood educators, from striking.

  • pedz@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    I find it tragic that people in Canada mock Trump, and the Republicans to an extent, say they would never vote for something like this, and then vote for something like this here.

    Same in Québec. People parrot conservative, republican, and even trumpist views, then vehemently defend themselves saying they are not conservatives or trumpist. And they re-elect the CAQ, that cuts public transit funding, ignores pedestrian safety, and doesn’t even know what active transport is. They whine against bike paths and parking removal. They whine against FLOWERS. FUCKING FLOWERS! But they consider themselves centrists moderates, and vote for Ford, or Legault, for “economic reasons”.

    • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Ford is so economical. Thats why he is spending tax payer dollars ripping out newly installed bike lanes and spending money fighting about it in court because the conservatives are “fiscally responsible”.

      • pedz@lemmy.ca
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        16 hours ago

        Yes, and he wants to dig a tunnel under the 401. It’s obviously going to bring so much revenue and add many benefits to the economy, just after paying the billions for the tunnel, and the few millions every year for maintenance. A real cash cow. This baby is going to pay for itself in a few years.

        In Québec, Legault is hell bent on digging a tunnel under the river between Québec City and Lévis. The estimates are around 10 billion. And don’t worry about greenhouse gases or pollution, they will add a token transit lane. They recently cut funding for schools and healthcare. And as mentioned, they also don’t want to fund public transit properly. At some point they wanted to cut funding for the provincial network of bike trails. But there’s money for the tunnel project.

        And the people voting for those clowns are just “ordinary folks with ordinary preoccupations, stuck in traffic, with gases prices that are too high and too much immigration”, but they’re not conservatives! They’re just centrists concerned about the economy. Republican and Trump policies are ridiculous. We’re very progressive! It’s a question of numbers!

        As I said, I find it very tragic, and sad, that when I go see my family in the not so deep countryside, I hear them parrot the same things a republican redneck could say, but in different words. They complain about the mayor of Montreal destroying the city with bike lanes even if they don’t live there. They move around in giant pickup trucks and SUVs and complain about gas prices. They complain about environmental rules. They joke about “people these days and their pronouns”. But they’re not for republican politics nor for Trump! Oh no! He’s an idiot!

        And we like to think we’re different from Americans…

  • leastaction@lemmy.ca
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    16 hours ago

    How does the Notwithstanding Clause apply to a court decision? The Clause is about the Charter, which has nothing to do with bike lanes.

  • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The people of Ontario need focused leadership on many major issues they are facing. Wasting time by meddling in municipal affairs while the country is begging canadians to support each other is pathetic. Ontario can do better, deserves better, and needs better leadership from our premier than this.

  • panda_abyss@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    No.

    You don’t get to suspend civil rights to remove fucking bike lanes.

    I haven’t gotten out and protested Ford yet, but I swear to God this is so fucking frivolous and trivial, especially when he DIDN’T do this fro the trucker protests.

    Just fucking no.

    • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      You lost the court case doug. Give it a fucking rest and do something useful for the people of Ontario for a change. Right there with you ready to protest if he pushes this further.

  • yardratianSoma@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Even this dimwit admitted, after being forced to ride a bike for TVO (video),

    “When it comes to bicycle riders, we have to make sure that they are safe”

    • BeBopALouie@lemmy.ca
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      18 hours ago

      If I could afford to buy a house I would move close to fascist ford’s grave to piss on it daily when the time comes.

  • patatas@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Love it that we have a rule that allows governments to flaunt every other rule, meaning we don’t actually have rules constraining governments, we merely have suggestions.

    • sik0fewl@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      I’m pretty sure that the notwithstanding clause is there to prevent people to take alternate means of transport to work (thus freeing up the roads for people that insist on using cars).

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    is this the cocain guy? he sounds like the cocaine guy. Im sorry it might be crack. Get that confused all the time and superhans makes fun of me for it.

    • saigot@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      This is crack mayors brother, just as, if not more corrupt but ostensibly sober.